Connecticut's former To Read And Discuss Her Work At Quinnipiac University

READER SUBMITTED:

October 24, 2012|John W. Morgan, Quinnipiac University, Hamden

Marilyn Nelson, Connecticut's poet laureate from 2001-2006, will read from her work during an open dialogue on creativity and the arts at 2 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 29, in the Carl Hansen Student Center, Room 120, on Quinnipiac University's Mount Carmel Campus.

This event, sponsored by the Quinnipiac Bookstore and the English Department in the College of Arts and Sciences at Quinnipiac, is free and open to the public.

Of her work, Poet Mark Doty writes, "Nelson's bold and sure poems long for heaven andhappily for uscontinue a lifelong affair with the occasions of earth."

Among Nelson's books are: "The Homeplace;" "The Fields of Praise, Carver;" "Fortune's Bones;" "Miss Crandall's School," which she wrote with Elizabeth Alexander; "The Freedom Business;" "Sweethearts of Rhythm;" and "A Wreath for Emmett Till."

Nelson's honors include two National Education Association creative writing fellowships, the 1990 Connecticut Arts Award, a Fulbright Teaching Fellowship, a fellowship from the J.S. Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and the Frost Medal, the Poetry Society of America's most prestigious award, for a "distinguished lifetime achievement in poetry."

Nelson's reading is part of the annual poetry tour of the Connecticut Poetry Circuit, which also sponsors readings by Connecticut student poets each spring. For more information, call 203-582-8652.

Quinnipiac is a private, coeducational, nonsectarian institution located 90 minutes north of New York City and two hours from Boston. The university enrolls 6,200 full-time undergraduate and 2,300 graduate students in 58 undergraduate and more than 20 graduate programs of study in its School of Business and Engineering, School of Communications, School of Education, School of Health Sciences, School of Law, Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine, School of Nursing and College of Arts and Sciences. Quinnipiac consistently ranks among the top regional universities in the North in U.S. News & World Report's America's Best Colleges issue. The 2013 issue of U.S. News & World Report's America's Best Colleges named Quinnipiac as the top up-and-coming school with master's programs in the Northern Region. Quinnipiac also is recognized in Princeton Review's "The Best 377 Colleges." For more information, please visit http://www.quinnipiac.edu. Connect with Quinnipiac on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/quinnipiacuniversity and follow Quinnipiac on Twitter @QuinnipiacU.